Absolutely. As a flat broke teenager I convinced my parents to buy me a Chinon SLR, anything fancier was out of the question. Of course I craved something better but got on with the photography. Three years later I managed to buy myself an Olympus OM1. Looking back there was nothing wrong with the Chinon negatives or slides, they were as sharp and contrasty as other 35mm cameras and left an unrepeatable legacy of shots of an important era.
Being young and broke often leads to status anxiety. The truth is it doesn't matter what you shoot with so long as the photograph is interesting. Cameras can be replaced but your youthful years will never come back.
BTDT and I began seriously with an OM1. Early on, of course the 1.4's, Pro Film and Medium Format all were quite alluring. Eventually I got into some other stuff and went to Medium Format, under the impression of superiority though no more 35mm. Film costs/price per frame and cheap 135 cameras meant this didn't hold for long.
I use prosumer or consumer cameras for 35mm as "battle cameras" and killed a couple due to salt water exposure and beach duties but got great results out of that usage. The best example is a Canon Waterproof that I got for 1GBP and could just get a couple rolls through, but allowed me a special perspective.
The best images from a couple years ago were on "late friend's dad shed stored 1 year expired cheap Fujicolor". I myself am a maximizer and try to get the maximum (quality), but when otherwise just make it work under the limits.
Thankfully digital is a good compliment as well.
But there are 90s AF SLRs for very affordable prices that have features Leica don't (I know, these are unsexy VCR alike things) but as a light tight box, at less the price a fuel tank, are excellent.
Then the irony: "On imperfection lies expression". End up having top gear that is bordering perfection, and then seek "inferior" stuff to get some character.